You can actually skip the tutorial as well after you've beaten it once. After you delete data048.bin, start the game up and click through the terms/set name. After you pick your starter dragon and hit the confirm pop-up, immediately force quit the app. Once you start it up again you'll be able to start playing the game without going through the tutorial (and forced rem pull).

I was in a hotel and randomly flipped to HBO at this part when it was airing, I still haven't seen any more of the doc yet, because what is the point? I mean, it has to be one of the most "holy shit" moments in TV history

I'd recommend watching through the full miniseries at some point. Yes the ending is jaw dropping (the even crazier part was that he was still a free man until coincidentally he was arrested the same day the finale aired), but there are so many other aspects of this story that are fascinating. It's crazy to see all of the things he was accused of or involved in, and yet somehow dodged every bullet for so long.

That's it. I wish that stat growth wasn't tied to the class you're playing at the time (hence you should look up builds). It's otherwise a nearly perfect game. 8/10, yes, this single problem takes 2 whole points off.

Honestly you don't really need to look up builds unless you're in to minmaxing. As long as you don't do something silly like play warrior for 180 levels and then try to switch to magick archer for the last 20 you'll be fine. At end game your stat bonuses from equipment far outpace your gains from leveling.

Funny enough the game you linked actually does have a literal cheat menu built in (at least for the pc version). Lets you mod yourself, enemies, physics, etc...

Plus cheat engine still exists for pc games. No different than back in the day when we would buy gamesharks and plug them in to the back of our consoles for the many games that did not have cheat menus.

Although it's true that they aren't really the same niche...Rocksmith with cdlc is fucking awesome. Bought a cheapo electric guitar from a pawn shop. I knew next to nothing about playing guitar before buying it and I picked up some basics really fast. And with its dynamic difficulty you can hop in to nearly any song and have a good time.

Her dungeon is expiring soon, so there will be lots of people running it in the next few days (you can see if you can grab a room on discord). Otherwise I think all of these callers will rotate back around during a series of OSCs, if I remember the news from jp right.

Awesome! I skimmed the (very extensive) game changes log and it looked like they tried to improve act 3+, which was an awful slog and just super tedious to get through.

Luckily I still have some motivation to play, but the original group I multiplayered with uninstalled as soon as we hit credits the first time because of the end game hell. Can't wait to see what they've done.

Similar in moment to moment gameplay, less linear. I played through pretty stealthy only rarely pulling out guns, mostly using the bow or takedowns. You visit decently sized hub maps, which have the requisite tombs/caves/sidequest/collectibles to explore and collect. Some of this is tied to light metroidvania elements--complete this story quest and find rope, which lets you shoot rope arrows to cross gaps etc. There's character progression through leveling up (which gets you perks) and basic weapon crafting (handling upgrades and special ammo).

The story was ok. It didn't really grab me but it kept me interested enough to finish the game.

Depends why they are streaming. Many of them never want to be big streamers, though obviously many do. Some just enjoy the idea of streaming even.

Personally, I stream sometimes with only 1 to 3 viewers, those are my friends who asked me to stream a game for them. My twitch account is very old and I've streamed for years, but it was never to be a "pro streamer" it's literally to just let my friends watch.

I also stream some things, like D&D, without a game tagged just because I want to easily archive the footage.

Yep, this is me as well. I have been streaming (off and on) since it was justin.tv. I only have about 30 followers, most of which are friends. But I've never streamed because I thought I could make money off it or become an internet star or whatever. I just enjoy seeing those people (or people I don't know) stop in and have a little conversation. Plus it's nice to have a recording going whenever something funny happens, or I accomplish something difficult.

Also, I have a fairly beefy computer so it's not really impacting my gameplay at all to stream at the same time. So I don't see small streams like our as a problem with twitch. The only problem for me comes when I'm doing my extra life stream and there's nobody around in the wee hours of the night. It can be hard to push through the last little bit when you don't have viewers around to keep you engaged :)

Min maxing your level up bonuses isn't that big of a deal (in that for the vast majority of players you can completely ignore doing it). By the time you reach end game your bonuses from equipment far outweigh your stat growths.

I never got around to playing the remake (and it's been years since I played the original), but from what I remember reading the remake made a lot of the puzzles easier and improved the inventory interface.